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- Title
The emblazoned kingdom ablaze. Heraldic iconoclasm and armorial recovery during the French Wars of Religion, 1588–95.
- Authors
Thiry, Steven
- Abstract
Despite ever increasing emphasis on the significance of royal iconography, historians of political culture rarely consider heraldic symbolism in its own terms. Besides being deeply entangled with learned discourse, coats of arms had a material dimension which empowered them with the agency to produce the abstract presence of rulership. Desecration of the king’s escutcheon impaired both the status of the embodied bearer and the welfare of the political community. Such heraldic iconoclasm and subsequent symbolic reconfiguration appeared prominently at the height of the French Wars of Religion, when the political foundations of monarchy were openly questioned. Armorial assaults against Henri III, foreshadowing his physical assassination, repudiated his kingship and affected the heraldic representation of the body politic. Eventually, the potency of royal arms overcame this existential confusion. Henri IV’s programme of symbolic recovery renovated the prestige of the fleurs-de-lis and safeguarded French autonomy.
- Subjects
FRANCE; DEVICES (Heraldry); FLEUR-de-lis; HERALDRY; KINGS &; rulers; DECORATIONS of honor; HENRY IV, King of France, 1553-1610; REIGN of Henry IV, France, 1589-1610; FRENCH Wars of Religion, 1562-1598
- Publication
French History, 2013, Vol 27, Issue 3, p323
- ISSN
0269-1191
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/fh/crt050